Overcoming the Myth of Authority
By Gary Z McGee
“For thousands hacking at the
branches there is one striking the root.”~Henry David Thoreau
If, as Albert Einstein said, “unthinking respect for
authority is the greatest enemy of truth,”then it stands to reason that we
should think critically toward, rather than blindly believe in, authority. No
matter who or what that authority might be.
Whether it’s an eccentric physicist with wild hair or an
authoritarian president demanding respect without giving it. Whether it’s a
flat-earther challenging the very foundations of physics, or an overreaching
cop high on false power. Belief in authority is a huge psychological hang-up
for our species. It’s an evolutionary impediment of monumental proportions.
Even as we daily self-overcome, so too should we daily
overcome the myth of authority. It’s a myth because it’s foremost a story. It’s
a story we’ve all fallen for –hook, line, and sinker. It’s a story that most of
us were culturally conditioned to believe in. It’s a story that most of us take
as a given, but certainly should not. For, ultimately, “it’s just the way
things are” is a cowardly copout.
Rather than cowardice, rather than willful ignorance,
complacency, and intellectual laziness, we should challenge the myth of
authority –across the board. We should be ruthless with our skepticism, like a
scientist regarding his own hypothesis, like peer-reviewed interrogators
keeping the science of others honest.
Because the art of life, especially an examined life that’s
well-lived, is scientific, logical, and reasonable. It strikes at the heart of
the orthodoxy, whatever that may be. It undermines the Powers That Be, whoever
they may be. And that’s likely to upset more than a few blind worshippers,
myopic rule-followers, and willfully ignorant law-abiding citizens. So be it.
Upset their precious apple-cart anyway. Especially if that apple-cart is
outdated, violent, and based upon parochial reasoning and fear. As Oscar Wilde
stated, “Disobedience was man’s original virtue.”
Overcoming authoritarianism:
“As soon as the generals and the politicos
can predict the motions of your mind, lose it. Leave it as a sign to mark the
false trail, the way you didn’t go. Be like the fox who makes more tracks than
necessary, some in the wrong direction. Practice resurrection.” ~Wendell Berry
The problem with belief in authority is that it leads to the
idea that we need to give a group of people permission to control us. And, as
Lord Byron taught us, power given to an authority tends to become corrupt.
The problem with power is not the intent behind it. The
problem with power is that it tends to corrupt the one wielding it regardless
of their intent. So, since we all know that power tends to corrupt whether one
has good or bad intentions, and since we know that we will all seek power
anyway, it behooves us to be mercilessly circumspect both with our own power
and against the power of others.
It stands to reason that we should not ignorantly give power
to an authority by blindly believing it. We should instead challenge authority
first, and trust it second, if at all. The best way to use our power is to use
it against authority by ruthlessly questioning it. It’s a social leveling
mechanism par excellence. As a wise, young sixth grader once said, “Question
authority, including the authority that told you to question authority.”
Otherwise, people will fight and murder and commit genocide
and ecocide for the so-called authority that they “believe” in. But they might
not have fought so violently and thoughtlessly had they simply taken the power
dynamic into deep consideration, nonviolently challenged that perceived
dynamic, and then moved on smartly with their lives.
The best way to maintain a healthy skepticism, and not
devolve into an ignorant, sycophantic, violent mess, is to take things into
consideration and question them rather than blindly believe in them.
Overcoming tribalism:
“To be modern is to let imagination and
invention do a lot of the work once done by tradition and ritual.” ~Adam Gopnik
By becoming worldly patriots instead of patriotic
nationalists, we turn the tables on xenophobia, apathy, and blind nationalism,
and we become more compassionate and empathetic towards other cultures. When we
celebrate diversity instead of trying to cram the square peg of cultural
affiliation into the round hole of colonialism, we turn the tables on the
monkey-mind’s one-dimensional moral tribalism and we usher in Joshua Greene’s
multi-dimensional concept of metamorality.
By reinforcing global citizenry rather than nationalism, we
turn the tables on both our lizard brains and the Powers That Be. Like Joshua
Greene says in Moral Tribes,
“We need a kind of
thinking that enables groups with conflicting moralities to live together and
prosper. In other words, we need a metamorality. We need a moral system that
resolves disagreements among groups with different moral ideals, just as
ordinary first-order morality resolves disagreements among individuals with
different selfish interests.”
Going Meta with morality launches us into a big-picture
perspective. We’re shot out of the box of outdated tribal thinking and into a
realm of higher consciousness, where our inherent tribalism gets countered by
an updated logic and reasoning. We gain the holistic vision of “over eyes”
(like the astronaut Overview Effect), where societal delusions and cultural
abstractions dissolve into interconnectedness and interdependence.
Overcoming magical thinking:
“Every fact of science was once damned.
Every invention was considered impossible. Every discovery was a nervous shock
to some orthodoxy. Every artistic innovation was denounced as fraud and folly.
The entire web of culture and ‘progress,’ everything on earth that is man-made
and not given to us by nature, is the concrete manifestation of some man’s
refusal to bow to Authority. We would own no more, know no more, and be no more
than the first apelike hominids if it were not for the rebellious, the
recalcitrant, and the intransigent.” ~Robert Anton Wilson
Overcoming magical thinking is vital for the healthy and
progressive evolution of our species. Healthy progress depends upon courageous
individuals capable of challenging authority. Especially authorities that are
based in magical thinking.
If we don’t have the courage to challenge an authority that
preaches magical thinking, then we are doomed to become a victim to their
magical thinking. It’s for this reason, above all, that authority should be
challenged.
Refusing to bow to an authority is not without its
consequences. But upsetting an authority should not be avoided at the expense
of progress. Progress should be embraced at the risk of upsetting an authority.
Otherwise, there would be no progress. We would remain stuck
in parochial, magical thinking. We would become a stagnant –or worse,
devolving– species. To avoid unhealthy stagnation and entropic devolution, we
need courageous individuals who refuse to bow to authority and instead choose
to ruthlessly question and nonviolently challenge that authority.
Without those who are willing to disobey, we are lost.
Without them, we are left with cowardly conformists, xenophobic nationalists,
complacent pacifists, dogmatic believers relying upon blind faith, and
tyrannical powermongers using their power to control others. In short: we are
left with magical thinking over logic and reasoning.
So, I implore you, if you would be courageous, reasonable,
healthy, progressive human beings: challenge Authority. Strategically disobey.
Nonviolently revolt. Lovingly crush out. Tenderly recondition the cultural
conditioning of others lest they collapse in upon their own cognitive
dissonance. Dare to pull the blindfold from your brother’s eyes lest they
unwittingly force the blindfold back upon you.
Above all, practice self-overcoming. Otherwise, power
–either yours or someone else’s– will overcome you. Be just as circumspect with
your own power as you are toward the power of others.
Authorities will come and go. As they should. Your own
authority will wax and wane. As it should. The balance of power within the
human condition is vital for the healthy and progressive evolution of our
species. And nothing balances out power better than the courage to challenge
authority. The biblical courage of David pales in comparison to the individual
who bravely challenges the modern-day Goliath of entrenched authority.
About the Author
Gary ‘Z’ McGee, a former Navy Intelligence Specialist turned
philosopher, is the author of Birthday Suit of God and The Looking Glass Man.
His works are inspired by the great philosophers of the ages and his wide awake
view of the modern world.
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